Jessabelle (2025) emerges as a chilling psychological horror that digs deep into trauma, memory, and inherited evil. Starring Sarah Snook and Anthony Mackie, the film uses atmosphere and emotional unease to deliver a haunting experience that lingers long after the final scene.

The story follows Jessabelle as she returns to her childhood home after a devastating accident, searching for comfort and recovery. Instead, she finds a place saturated with dark memories and unseen forces. The house itself feels alive, filled with whispers, shadows, and a presence that refuses to remain hidden.
Sarah Snook delivers a gripping performance, capturing vulnerability, fear, and growing determination as her character unravels the truth behind her family’s past. Her descent into psychological terror feels intimate and unsettling. Anthony Mackie provides a strong supporting presence, grounding the story while adding emotional tension and urgency.

The film excels in building suspense through subtle details rather than constant shocks. Creaking floorboards, fleeting silhouettes, and unsettling silence work together to create an atmosphere of constant dread. Each revelation pulls Jessabelle deeper into a nightmare where reality and hallucination become impossible to separate.